Declaration of the Andean Business Advisory
Council
The Andean Business Advisory Council, which
groups together the Andean Subregion’s most
important business associations and
organizations, wishes to make the following
public statement, in the light of recent
events that have taken place within the
Andean Community:
1. The Andean business community views with
concern and confusion the recent
announcement by President Hugo Chávez that
Venezuela is withdrawing from the
Hemisphere’s oldest integration process and,
without a doubt, the best expression of the
Bolivarian countries’ unity.
2. For many years, the Andean Community has
been a source of pride and of social
progress, as well as one of the region’s
most important economic and political
achievements. Therein lies the
undesirability of its weakening, precisely
at a time when globalization is spreading
throughout the world, requiring the
strengthening of regions and trading blocs.
3. Andean trade has been among the most
strongly growing trade in the Hemisphere and
its benefits extend to the entire
subregional production system, particularly
the small and medium companies that create
the largest numbers of trade
integration-driven jobs in our countries.
4. This vigor has transcended the Andean
Community and has made it possible to ease
criteria so that its Members may negotiate
jointly, individually or by groups. Such
are the cases of the negotiations with
MERCOSUR, with Chile, with Mexico and, more
recently, with the United States. The Member
Countries were duly informed about all of
these negotiations and together authorized
them expressly.
5. The Andean Community has sufficient
strengths in its citizens, its
infrastructure, its communications, its
trade, its institutions, its hydroenergy,
oil, gas, mineral, ichthyologic, and
forestry wealth, its biodiversity, and in
many other areas, to assume key commitments
for the future that should no longer be
postponed.
6. The pending agenda for the region’s
development covers physical integration,
respect for Andean decisions and judgments,
reinforcement of the common public
procurement and investment systems,
strengthening of international
transportation and the deepening of
integration in the service sector, among
many other aspects, all of them aimed at
fighting the unemployment, poverty,
exclusion and inequality that still remain
at high levels in the Andean countries.
For these reasons:
1. The Andean Business Advisory Council
reiterates that a split on this scale
created by Venezuela’s withdrawal from the
Andean integration process would seriously
jeopardize the region’s growth.
2. An open dialogue at the highest level is
essential to overcome this situation. We,
therefore, call upon the Governments of the
five Andean countries to immediately seek
solutions to the crisis more in the Andean
agenda of pending matters than in the
Members’ trade agreements with third
countries, and to lay the groundwork for a
sounder and more modern Andean Community
that would enable Andean citizens to seek a
more profound relationship with each other
and with the rest of the world.
3. We also stress that while it is true that
the governments are responsible for the
international negotiations and agreements
that will improve their citizens’ welfare,
it is even truer that it is the social
actors, businessmen and workers who, in
practice, see that these agreements are put
into effect and are made the most of. It
is, therefore, essential to strengthen the
unity of government leaders and social
actors through dialogue that is respectful,
effective and ongoing.
4. In order to reach a fair and equitable
association agreement with the European
Union, as well as with other countries or
country blocs in the future, we must
safeguard the negotiating power we have
built up as a result of the solidary union
of the five Andean countries.
Lima, April 27, 2006
José Luis Betancourt
Chairman
Andean Business Advisory Council